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Selinitsa is used by the locals and is often quoted as of Slavic origin. Does anybody has a reference of the ethymology handy? Patrick Leigh Fermor in Mani - Travels in the Southern Peloponnese (1958) only uses Selinitsa. Katerina Nikolas states: Selinitsa is actually the old name for Agios Nikolaos, but as this translates to Saint Nikolaos […] In which language? I don't see any similarities to modern Slavic languages; Saint Nicholas = Свети Никола (Mazedonian, Serbian, Bulgarian: Sveti Nikola), Святого Николая (Russian: Svyatogo Nikolaya), … There is a small town in Albania sq:Selenica, but no explanation of the name is given. I have even heard rumours that the name may derive form Selene. ;-) Alfie ↑↓ © 17:14, 20 September 2010 (UTC)
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Selinitsa is used by the locals and is often quoted as of Slavic origin. Does anybody has a reference of the ethymology handy? Patrick Leigh Fermor in Mani - Travels in the Southern Peloponnese (1958) only uses Selinitsa. Katerina Nikolas states: Selinitsa is actually the old name for Agios Nikolaos, but as this translates to Saint Nikolaos […] In which language? I don't see any similarities to modern Slavic languages; Saint Nicholas = Свети Никола (Mazedonian, Serbian, Bulgarian: Sveti Nikola), Святого Николая (Russian: Svyatogo Nikolaya), … There is a small town in Albania sq:Selenica, but no explanation of the name is given. I have even heard rumours that the name may derive form Selene. ;-) Alfie ↑↓ © 17:14, 20 September 2010 (UTC)